Answer color
Aang's blue arrow tattoos are not decoration. In Avatar lore they mark airbending mastery, and the arrow shape echoes flying bison, the original airbending teachers.
#94C0E5
- HEX
- #94C0E5
- RGB
- 148, 192, 229
- HSB
- 207°, 35%, 90%
- Target part
- Air Nomad Tattoos
The color, broken down
A sacred mark, not a paint stripe
Because the tattoos run across skin and scalp, many players remember the arrow as a stronger blue than it is. The mark has to stay readable on Aang, but it is not a saturated costume color.
The tattoo color feels airy: light, cool, and controlled. If it starts looking like a superhero emblem, saturation is too high.
Guessing the arrow
Begin with a pale blue and keep brightness high. Add only enough saturation for the arrow to stand apart from skin.
The best mental picture is the head arrow, not the orange-and-yellow Air Nomad clothing. The robes can make the blue feel cleaner by contrast, but the tattoo itself stays soft.
Nearby tones that look right and are wrong
For Aang Air Nomad Tattoos, the nearby swatches show plausible misses around #94C0E5. One swatch warms Air Nomad Tattoos; another cools it. The rest test saturation or brightness against #94C0E5.
#95B4E6
Too warm
Hue lands warmer than the target.
#95CFE6
Too cool
Hue lands cooler than the target.
#BED4E6
Too dull
Saturation drops below the answer.
#A6D7FF
Too bright
Brightness climbs past the target.
#81A8C7
Too dark
Brightness falls under the target.
Practice with this color
The saved answer for Aang Air Nomad Tattoos is #94C0E5, a blue color with HSB 207°, 35%, 90%. Because this is a smaller accent, a hue miss is easier to notice than it first appears.
Use small saturation moves here. A big hue swing usually changes more than this target needs. The target is bright, but a slightly darker guess can turn muddy fast. Use those two checks before changing the whole hue. This round is about Air Nomad Tattoos, not the full Avatar: The Last Airbender (2005) palette. Keep shadows, outlines, and nearby costume colors out of the guess when you judge Air Nomad Tattoos. Those details can push memory away from #94C0E5.
RGB 148, 192, 229 gives the channel mix. HSL 207°, 61%, 74% is a second lightness check when the preview looks close but still feels off. If the score is close but still low, check whether the guess stayed in the blue family. Then compare brightness 90% and saturation 35% with what you remembered.
Use the related cards after you answer Aang Air Nomad Tattoos: Stitch Body Fur #5078A7 / Donald Duck Sailor Jacket #0281BF. They are for comparing nearby colors after the run, not for memorizing #94C0E5 before the guess. Keep Aang, Air Nomad Tattoos, and #94C0E5 together in memory instead of averaging the whole silhouette.
Compare it with Stitch Body Fur #5078A7 / Donald Duck Sailor Jacket #0281BF; the colors are near each other, but the character parts are different. A practical replay order is color family first, brightness near 90% second, and saturation last.
In a run, start from how Air Nomad Tattoos feels on Aang before checking the exact HEX #94C0E5. After scoring, compare your guess with RGB 148, 192, 229 and HSB 207°, 35%, 90%. That usually shows whether the miss came from hue, saturation, or brightness. Open the related cards after the round: Stitch Body Fur #5078A7 / Donald Duck Sailor Jacket #0281BF. They are useful for nearby comparisons, but they should not replace the first memory of Air Nomad Tattoos.
Related characters
For Aang, use Stitch Body Fur #5078A7 / Donald Duck Sailor Jacket #0281BF as quick comparisons after the run. The main target is still Air Nomad Tattoos and #94C0E5.
Next steps